Moderna Museet

Time & Place: Milano-Torino 1958-1968

01 May - 07 Sep 2008

Alighiero Boetti
Catasta, 1967
© Christian Stein, Milano
TIME & PLACE: MILANO-TORINO 1958-1968

1 May - 7 September 2008

In the 1960s, a shift took place in Italian art, from emotionally charged abstract expressionism to a more idea-based form of expression.
The first part of this exhibition focuses on the artists’ interest in spatial interpretation and experiments on the boundary between fine arts and design. The second section has a more documentary approach, while the third and final part presents the so-called Arte Povera movement.
Towards the end of the Second World War, the centre of Milan had been devastated by air raids and a new, modern urban development now emerged, with an emphasis on industry, banking and trade fairs. Meanwhile, the art world spoke of reducing colour and subjective expression and of expanding the boundaries of sculpture and painting.
The exhibition is conceived as a path across a rich decade guided by Lucio Fontana, with his ideas and works on “space”, together with Piero Manzoni, emblematic of a new artistic generation addressing the conceptual aspects of the image. A few years into the 1960s, Turin took over the relay baton. The art scene, which had been dominated by informal painting, was now changing with a new generation of artists who focused on processes, ideas and unconventional materials. Centring round a handful of galleries and artist-driven project rooms, a new identity evolved, rooted in the ideas of Manzoni and Fontana.
In the last section the exhibition features seminal works of arte povera. Materials found in nature and in everyday life were used in new ways, and radical interpretations of artistic theory emerged. Mirror paintings that change appearance with every new setting mark the common interest in the context and the role of the viewer. The exhibition ends in 1968 with the wave of demonstrations that shook Italy. The Triennale in Milan was besieged by the artists, and a large number of the exhibitions at the 1968 Venice Biennale were closed in protest.

Curator: Luca Massimo Barbero, associate curator, the Guggenheim Museum, Venice
Project Manager: Cecilia Widenheim, Curator, Moderna Museet
 

Tags: Lucio Fontana, Piero Manzoni